Camp Ford's Civil War

Captivity, Community, and Nature in the Dark Corner of the Confederacy

Matthew M Stith author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Publishing:31st Oct '26

£22.00

This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Camp Ford's Civil War cover

The compelling story of overlapping Civil War communities connected to the largest POW camp west of the Mississippi River.

An accessible scholarly narrative about the Civil War in the southern Trans-Mississippi through the lens of the East Texas military prison at Camp Ford-a place defined by the swirling currents of Confederate, Union, civilian, and enslaved communities and the natural world around them.Camp Ford's Civil War tells the story of Union and Confederate soldiers and civilians, enslaved people and refugees, and the natural world around them during the Civil War. The focal point is a ten-acre piece of land where nearly 5,000 Union prisoners of war sat out of battle while fighting their own distinctive kind of war. The narrative also explains the conflict in the wider southern Trans-Mississippi theater, a place that remains in the historical and historiographical shadow of the Civil War elsewhere. This is a story of what became of the largest prisoner of war camp west of the Mississippi River, but it is also a story about the war in the 200 mile radius around the prison camp - the geographic medium in and through which a remarkably diverse range of human and non-human communities swirled and overlapped to create a fascinating, if understudied, narrative of the Civil War.

'Matthew M. Stith reconstructs the largely forgotten history of a Confederate prison to examine broader themes of community, survival, and postwar memory. Well written and deeply researched, Camp Ford's Civil War is an absorbing study, raising important questions about what Americans forget and what they remember about their civil war.' Lesley J. Gordon, author of Dread Danger: Cowardice and Combat in the American Civil War
'In his important new book, Matthew M. Stith shines a welcome new light on the darkest corner of the Confederacy. Camp Ford's Civil War is more than just a long-overdue history of the largest Confederate prison camp west of the Mississippi. Deftly using the tools of social, environmental, and cultural histories, Stith repays readers with his deep and careful probing of the community forged by the singular experience of captivity in our costliest war. Imaginatively conceived and gracefully written--building connections between landscapes real and imagined, built and natural--this book is a feat of modern Civil War scholarship.' Brian Matthew Jordan, author of the Pulitzer Prize finalist Marching Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War

ISBN: 9781009627795

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 336g

244 pages